Until that threshold is reached, developers building affordable units are allowed to bypass local zoning laws, which has led to resistance and backlash from some municipalities, many of them suburban.

This legislation would have made it easier for cities and towns to reach the threshold necessary to halt unrestricted development by qualifying for multi-year moratoriums. It received wide bipartisan support in the General Assembly, passing the House by a vote of 116-33 and the Senate 30-6.

Malloy, in a three-page veto message, said the legislation would “perpetuate the harmful effects of bad economic policy and institutional segregation, damaging our state’s economy and its moral foundation.”

“This would roll back the tools that we have effectively used to have communities understand that everybody plays a role,” Malloy said told reporters. “The message speaks for itself.”

The vote margins in both chambers were wide enough to override a governor’s veto. House Speaker Joe Aresimowicz, D-Berlin, said he expects the legislature to consider taking up an override.

“This is an issue that is important to many legislators as evidenced by the strong support the bill had in both the House and Senate,” Aresimowicz said. “I fully expect it will be discussed as a potential action for the veto session, as well as around ongoing budget negotiations.”

Adam Joseph, a spokesman for Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, said the Senate Democrats would not begin considering which bills to bring up in a veto session until after the governor has signed or vetoed all legislation sent to his desk.

Malloy’s veto drew mixed reactions from legislators. Sen. Gayle Slossberg, D-Milford, one of the bill’s major advocates, called it “shortsighted.”

CtMirror.org file photo

Sen. Gayle Slossberg

“People in Milford and across Connecticut have been calling for common-sense reforms to our affordable housing statutes, and I am deeply disappointed that Gov. Malloy has chosen to ignore them,” Slossberg said. “The governor’s veto message shows a real lack of understanding of the specific workings of this statute and of the need for reform.

“Connecticut is the only state that allows private developers to site their developments wherever they choose. States that do not give this disproportionate power to housing developers have been much more successful than Connecticut in developing affordable housing,” she added.

Rep. John Frey, R-Ridgefield, urged legislative leaders to allow a vote to override the veto, saying he “will not be deterred on this issue.”

“I consider this an outrageous move by the governor,” Frey said. “The bill he just vetoed was the product of bipartisan discussion and mutual compromise, and it took hard work to pass the House and Senate as broadly as it did.

“If the governor won’t accept the careful and prudent ideas in HB 6880 to provide fairness and contemporary changes to the 8-30g statute, then he has truly given up trying to help municipalities. I’m really not sure what else we can do to get his attention about how serious of a problem this is,” he added.

Sen. Douglas McCrory, D-Hartford, said in a statement included in Malloy’s news release that he stands by the governor’s decision.

“I had serious concerns with the potential for this bill to reduce access to safe and affordable housing for thousands of Connecticut residents, so I am happy that the governor vetoed it,” he said.

Outside the legislature, the decision received praise from advocacy groups fighting homelessness.

Two of the state’s largest groups – the Partnership for Strong Communities and the Connecticut Coalition to End Homelessness – applauded Malloy’s veto in a joint statement.

“Time after time, Gov. Malloy has demonstrated he understands that a safe, secure and affordable home is the foundation of opportunity,” the statement said. “The 8-30g statute is a vital tool in expanding such opportunity for workers, families and young professionals in municipalities across Connecticut.”

“A larger supply of affordable homes is essential for maintaining Connecticut’s progress in fighting chronic homelessness and ending homelessness for families with children by the end of 2020 – our current statewide goal,” it continued.

The Regional Plan Association, an urban research and advocacy organization that operates in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey, also voiced its support for Malloy’s decision.

Melissa Kaplan-Macey, the organization’s director in Connecticut, called 8-30g “one of the state’s best tools for addressing a real and growing housing crisis.”

“If Connecticut municipalities don’t create more housing for more people, they will continue to face shrinking grand lists and increasing property taxes. This isn’t a sustainable trajectory for individual communities, and over time it will critically compromise the state’s already faltering economy,” Kaplan-Macey said.

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Kyle was a general assignment reporter at the Connecticut Mirror. A former State Capitol beat writer for The Daily Campus, he graduated from UConn with a bachelor's degree in journalism in 2017. He previously worked for the Mirror as a freelance reporter and, before that, was the Mirror's 2016 summer reporting fellow and an intern during the 2016 legislative session.

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Updated Monday at 3:54 p.m.
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